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The SME Instrument in HORIZON 2020
Marco Cecchetto Executive Agency for SMEs (EASME)
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SME support in Horizon 2020 Minimum 20% of H2020 budget for the priority "Societal challenges" and the specific objective "Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies" will be allocated to SMEs (about €9.3 billion) The dedicated SME Instrument (about €3 billion), following a predominately bottom-up logic, will address the needs of innovative SMEs
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The SME Instrument 3-stage support
Phase I - Feasibility study Phase II - Demonstration activities Phase III - Marketing
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Phase 1 - Concept & Feasibility Assessment
Idea to concept € in EU funding Feasibility study 10-page application 6 months in duration
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Phase 2 – Demonstration activities
Concept to market-maturity 70% funding rate (EU funding between 0.5 and 2.5 MEUR) The SME will further develop its proposal through innovation activities, such as demonstration, testing, piloting, scaling up, and miniaturisation 30-page application including business plan 1-2 years in duration
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Phase 3 – Market launch No stand-alone phase! No direct funding
Prepare for Market Launch No stand-alone phase! No direct funding SMEs will receive extensive support, training, mentorship Facilitate access to risk finance Additional support and networking opportunities (EEN)
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Business coaching Coaches will drive the performance of the organisation Coaches suggested by EEN, and selected by the SME Voluntary business coaching: Phase 1: 3 days Phase 2: 12 days Suggested: mention this bit during Phase 1 and Phase 2 lines Mentor and SME to decide a mentorship plan in Phase 1. A summary of mentorship foreseen for Phase 2 will form part of application to Phase 2 Mentorship paid in addition to Phase 1 and Phase 2 contribution
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Evaluation criteria Economic impact Excellence in innovation
Quality and efficiency of the implementation (including EU added value)
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Themes for In 2014 and 2015 the SME Instrument will sponsor SMEs operating within 13 themes: High risk ICT innovation Greener and more integrated transport Nanotech, or other advanced tech for manufacturing and materials Eco-innovation and sustainable raw material supply Space research and development Urban critical infrastructure Diagnostics devices and biomarkers Biotechnology-based industrial processes Sustainable food production and processing Mobile e-government applications (2015 only) Blue growth SME business model innovation (2015 only) Low carbon energy systems Only for-profit SMEs established in the EU or associated countries may apply Seek advice by support networks EEN and NCP
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Timeline Open call: proposals can be submitted any time
4 cut-off dates per year Received proposals are evaluated after each cut-off date Time to grant: 3 (phase I) or 6 (phase II) months after the cut-off date
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SME Instrument Phase 1: statistics after cut-off 18/06/2014
2.666 proposals received (success rate: 6%) 2503 single company applications, the rest submitted by consortia Out of the proposals submitted, 2602 were eligible and 317 got a score above the threshold. 49% of these are pre-selected for funding. Applicants did not use the advantage of the continuous call and evaluation and did only submit very shortly before the cut-off date (85% arrived within 48 h before cut-off) this & plus difficulties to send fast feedback to applicants before the cut-off dates might call for more cut-offs per year (e.g. every two months)
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SME Instrument Phase 1: statistics after cut-off 18/06/2014
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SME Instrument Phase 2: statistics after cut-off 9/10/2014
580 proposals received Applicants did not use the advantage of the continuous call and evaluation and did only submit very shortly before the cut-off date (85% arrived within 48 h before cut-off) this & plus difficulties to send fast feedback to applicants before the cut-off dates might call for more cut-offs per year (e.g. every two months)
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SME Instrument: 6 lessons learnt so far
Too much focused on the project and not enough on the business opportunity; Not convincing when describing the company (you have to explain why your company will succeed and not your competitor); Not providing enough information on competing solutions; Having a too low level of innovation, planning to develop a product that already exists on the market; Proposing just an idea without any concept for its commercialisation; Just trying their luck (the SME Instrument is not a lottery!).
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For more information go to: http://ec.europa.eu/easme/sme/ @H2020SME
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